Business Standard

Looking for a non-traditiona­l asset?

Forget the bottle, invest in whisky by the barrel

- AYA TAKADA & ICHIRO SUZUKI

Nigel Isherwood was so concerned about the fate of the global financial system last year that he turned to booze.

Since July, Isherwood has used a UK-based exchange to buy £41,000 ($51,300) of unbottled whisky still maturing inside 200-litre (53-gallon) oak casks — a bet that the Scotch will increase in value over time. His portfolio also includes fine French wine and precious metals. He sees those non-traditiona­l assets as a financial hedge, especially if inflation takes off.

“I don’t know anything about whisky, but it doesn’t matter to me,” Isherwood, 50, said by email from Adelaide, South Australia, where he works as a sports coach. “I know that spreading capital around is always good sense. Maturing whisky fits my investment principles.” With 40-year-old Scotch fetching more than $2,000 a bottle and consumptio­n of all whiskies growing globally, it’s perhaps no surprise that investors would look to profit from the market. Price increases over the past eight years have been more than double those of gold or silver, based on industry data tracked by WhiskyInve­stDirect, which offers trading in casks from 18 Scottish distilleri­es.

Scotland, the world’s biggest whisky seller, exports more than 1 billion bottles a year and makes the only kind that can be called Scotch, according to the Scotch Whisky Associatio­n. The country has about 20 million maturing casks in warehouses. It takes at least three years before the spirits can be bottled, though higherend varieties may sit for 12 years or more. A typical cask contains enough for about 267 standard 750-millilitre bottles.

The owners of London-based Galmarley Ltd, which founded WhiskyInve­stDirect, figured all those litres sitting for years in warehouses could be bought and sold by investors, which had the potential to transform the way distilleri­es finance their businesses. Galmarley has some related experience. In 2003, it created BullionVau­lt, a platform for trading physical gold and silver that now handles about $2 billion in transactio­ns annually.

The marketplac­e created by WhiskyInve­stDirect is still relatively small. There are only about 4,000 investor accounts with almost £10 million invested in roughly 3 million litres. About 70 per cent of customers are in the UK.

But the company is eyeing expansion in other markets where whisky sales are growing, including Japan, where interest rates near zero mean bank deposits and government bonds provide no yield, Patrick said. Later this year, the exchange will start dollar-based trading of Scotch, followed by yen-denominate­d transactio­ns. Over the next decade, he says the exchange could be handling 30 million litres. “The merit of investing in whisky is risk dispersion,” said Yasuo Sugeno, senior economist at Daiwa Institute of Research. “Its demerit, like gold, is that investors cannot get dividends while holding it.”

While Japanese distilleri­es now make some of the most-prized whiskies in the world, domestic demand exceeds production. Imports in 2016 reached a 14year high of 37,835 kilolitres, up 22 percent from a year earlier and more than double what they were a decade ago. The UK was the largest supplier at 23,476 kilolitres, or 62 per cent of the total, followed by the US and Canada.

“Turning wholesale whisky into an asset investable for individual­s is a very unique idea,” said Kazuhiko Saito, chief analyst at Fujitomi, a commodity broker in Tokyo. “No other companies are providing such a product in Japan. Whisky’s nature — that its value increases as it ages — is completely different from other commoditie­s. In that sense, it may attract interest from investors.”

 ??  ?? An employee moves a wooden cask of whisky at a distillery in Keith, UK
An employee moves a wooden cask of whisky at a distillery in Keith, UK

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